Token Unlocks and Vesting in January 2026: What’s Pressuring Price This Week
This material is educational and not financial advice.
In late January, attention often swings back to supply schedules: the market moves, and people start checking whether a big unlock is about to hit.
Unlocks are straightforward: tokens that were previously locked become available on a predefined schedule, increasing circulating supply.
What’s Unlocking: Cliff vs Linear
Most unlocks fall into two buckets:
- Cliff unlock: a one-time, large release in a single chunk. This is the one that tends to create short-term pressure, because supply arrives all at once.
- Linear vesting: a steady release over days or weeks. It’s less dramatic on the chart, but it adds a constant background supply.
What’s Happening in the Market Right Now?
For a quick snapshot, it’s usually easiest to check aggregators that list upcoming cliff events.
According to Tokenomist, Cliff Unlocks Next 7D (as of the update dated 26.01.2026) is around $151.96M, with some of the largest items including SUI ($60.94M), SIGN ($11.61M), EIGEN ($11.56M), KMNO ($10.07M) (Tokenomist also shows the % of supply next to each token).
The same dashboard also shows “Release this week” at about $1.38B (a broader weekly release/emission figure for the selected view).
Important: “released” doesn’t mean “sold”. An unlock tells you tokens became available. Whether that turns into selling depends on who received the tokens and what they typically do.
How Big Is a “Big Unlock” for the Market?
Use one simple test.
Step 1. Compare unlock size to volume
A quick back-of-the-envelope metric:
Unlock/Volume ratio = $unlock / (average daily volume × N days)
- < 5% of 3–7 days of volume: the market often absorbs it without much drama (assuming decent liquidity).
- 5–15%: worth watching — recipients and order book depth matter.
- > 15%: higher risk, especially if liquidity is thin or volume is inflated.
Step 2. Check who receives the tokens
An unlock to “team/investors” behaves differently from an unlock to “ecosystem/grants/liquidity”.
- Team/VC: more incentive to take some profit, especially on a recurring schedule.
- Ecosystem: tokens may go into incentives, marketing, liquidity — pressure can be spread out over time.
Step 3. Look at how the token behaved around past unlocks
If the project has history, it’s often more useful than any tweet:
- did price drop before the unlock date?
- was there a bounce after the event?
- did past cliff dates coincide with higher volumes?
Step 4. Evaluate liquidity
Check:
- spreads during calm hours
- order book depth (how far price moves if you hit market with $X)
- where volume is concentrated (if it’s mostly on one venue, that’s added risk)
Why “Unlock vs Volume” Can Mislead
Three common traps:
- Volume looks high, but depth is weak (lots of churn, little real liquidity).
- Volume is a one-off spike (news-driven), while normal-day liquidity is poor.
- The unlock lands on a weekend/night session (thinner liquidity → sharper moves).
How to Build Your Own Weekly Unlock Digest
- Open a dashboard with cliff unlocks next 7 days and list the top 5–10 events of the week.
- For each: $unlock, % of supply, who receives it (if available), and your unlock/volume ratio.
- Highlight tokens you already hold: what happens in the next 7–14 days matters more than “the whole market”.
Conclusion
Late January 2026 unlocks are a practical signal: they answer “how much new supply may become available in the next few days” and help you spot where selling pressure risk is higher.
Compare unlock size to volume and liquidity, check recipients, and look at prior unlock reactions. Then unlock data becomes a routine pre-trade check, not a scary headline.